A Comparative Free Write: The Wedding Industry vs. The Baby Industry

Crossposted at Feministe

Lately, my thoughts have been swirling around one comparative question:

What’s worse – the wedding industry or the baby industry?

Recovering my 2004 journal, the year I was engaged, I see loopy sketches of my fiancée with the word “love” underneath and short poems exploring life and commitment. To describe my decision to marry marriage I used phrases like “a symphony of mystery” and “frisson of pleasure.” Not too far from my blotchy sketches are wrinkled, tear-stained pages. I see I made a separate column called “hate” and I named every detail of the wedding process, the whole parade and folly of rings, illusion, disingenuous sales pitches and vendors, showers and parties, and the endless charade of enjoying it all.

[October 2004: Today I nearly passed out when trying on veils. It looked so ridiculous and false on me. The room was screeching with white-dressed bodies barking orders to whoever would listen. I had to sit down and breathe between my legs. I have to see myself when I look in the mirror. I have to see me. On my time. I have to see myself in this.]
I was never a bride.

I was just a person in love, ready to move forward.

I had choices and I did it. I got married AND had a wedding. The coming together of two radically different cultures, races, and expectations was one of the most stressful experiences of my life. Both families had religious backgrounds, so tradition had some role to play in the process and compromising on what was authentic and what was for show was a long, tedious process of discussion and frustration.

But I did it.

That transition from single to married was healthily marred with grief and mourning. Facing the profound changes in relationships, responsibility, lifestyle, and geography weren’t celebratory, they were somber and I took them seriously.

However, one of the things that that irked me the most was the response so many had when I shared I was getting married: “Oh, EVERYONE’S getting married!” That miffed me. And I would always say to my friends and confidants, “Yeah, but I’m not everybody. This is a big deal in MY life and I am trying to share this with you. This is me, not the whole world.”

In that time period of my life, I remember thinking that the blanket of the wedding industry and the superfluous toppings of details and colors erased me and my reality. It erased the very real and tangible truth that I had fallen in love and decided to commit to one person. That imminent torque in my identity was my focus. And love. Love was my primary lifeline.

It was rare to find an understanding person in those 9 months of engagement. No one likes to hear of hesitancy, fear, and doubt that can exist outside the vacuum of saying Yes to marriage. It wasn’t about the relationship I had built with him that was sturdy and grounded. It was about the internal conversion of accepting full and unpredictable responsibility that came with building a future with another person. It was about facing the fears of possible failure, adultery, death, dependency, sharing, and betrayal.

I was never a bride.

I was just an honest person, a writer.

And here I am again, faced with another 9 month transition and the roller coaster begins again.

It’s like falling in love again. My partner and I have been brought even closer because of this choice. The only time I truly feel at peace is when we lay on our sides and talk about how uncertain the future is, how our expectations are creeping in our consciousness even when we try to keep them at bay, how this person coming to us will be nothing like what we think or imagine. We laugh at our crazy inadequacies to be in control. We laugh at the idea of making a will when we don’t have much, financially or materialistically, to pass on. We struggle through naming guardians in case my partner and I die. We smoothed through bumpy parts of our interracial marriage. Now we will have an multi-cultured/-racial/-everything child.

And then there’s the baby industry and circus…Listening to advice I don’t necessarily need or want. Dealing with colors and decorating a room. Registering. Showers. Ooohing and ahhing over bellies instead of diamonds.

Within weeks of knowing I was pregnant, truckloads of magazines and websites found me despite my non-disclosing nature. The amount of THINGS I am told that I need exhausts me.

[August 2009: “A baby wipes warmer? Do I look like the type of person to warm up my own toilet paper?!”]

There was something eerily similar, I noticed, to the wedding industry.

[August 2004: “A ring is a beautiful symbol, but why an engagement ring? I’d be fine with just the wedding band.”]

A life-changing event, a shift in identity, another choice made in a hopefully egalitarian

manner…and the isolation sits in.

“Oh, EVERYONE’s pregnant these days.”

“Yeah, but I’m not everybody. This is a big deal in MY life and I am trying to share this with you.”

How is it that more people are interested in what kind of crib I will need than how my writing schedule will alter? How is it that more people are interested in the date of the ultrasound that will announce gender than the date I get a nuchal translucency screening that tests for Down Syndrome? When I do articulate feelings, why are my worries and fears minimized to a scattering of pulp when I muse aloud about my career, my ability to move and travel, the unknown, unpredictable future and that, yes, I am choosing this, AND, yes, am still scared?

Why do people equate decision making with the quality of unshakeable certainty? And why do we strategize to circumvent fear? Why is it endlessly equivalent to second thoughts, wanting to retreat or rewind time?

Is it so unthinkable to posit that fear is the intuitive threshold to responsibility and acknowledging the parts of ourselves that are afraid takes more strength than pretending or that I don’t see how enormous this choice is? Could fear be reframed to be more of a guide than a disdained guest in our bodies?

Married, pregnant female seeks presence and companionship, not advice. Experienced and gentle minds to converse with and a community that loves honesty and facing unprecedented transformation are desirous. Above all, seeks wisdom, not distractions.

Rage Against the Bridal Industry

Sometimes is it a miracle that I have not researched how to plant a pipe bomb in an empty bridal shop.  

There are few things I loathe in this life, but one of them is the hell that is mainstream weddings.
Now, I’m not talking marriage or civic unions, or love ceremonies.  I am talking about the bullshit bridal party, decorations, and dresses, manicures, colors, flowers, cake, bridesmaid coordinated colors that drive me insane.
It’s not something I blog about often because it’s so trivial, but with this latest debacle, I may take this issue on full force because of what it does to womyn’s self esteem and body image.
I’m in a wedding this Saturday and while it is not my favorite thing to do to get trussed up in heels and curl my hair, the bride is a loved one and I’m honored to be her friend.  I ordered my dress and, low and behold, after size 14 or something, you have a $50 charge for extra cloth.  I ask, oh?  do you charge an arbitrary $20 charge when you have a person who needs a size 10 because they need more material than a size 2.  “No, there’s no charge for a size 10.”
Oh, I see.  So, because the bust is too small, never mind that I’ll be swimming in the rest of it, I have to shell out more money because someone decided that womyn over an arbitrary number require “more resources?”
And it’s not my whole body, it’s just a part of my body – my breasts.  My lovely brown round globes of beauty, pleasure, life, abundance, and gift.  My breasts.  Apparently, they’re too large for this dress and I have to pay extra because my body isn’t uniformly distributed the way this all white bridal shop measures “normal” figures.
I wait the proverbial three months for the damn dress to arrive.  All the while, I am sweating, worrying, wondering what is wrong with ME.  Why, for the (not exaggerating) 9th time, I am forced to pay more for my breasts to be in another wedding.  I can’t count how many arguments I’ve had with brides to convince them to let their bridesmaid choose a simple black dress they feel confident in and they can reuse.  I can’t count how many conversations I’ve engaged with bridal shop consultants, telling them it’s a ruthless discrimination against heavier womyn to charge them more their dresses.
A wedding.  Is it worth it to have everyone wear the same color when inside many of them are made to feel wrong for their bodies?
The dress arrives.
Surprise, surprise, it doesn’t fit!  I have to wrap the dress around me like a towel.  It won’t even hold up anywhere on my body.
While I am hanging onto the dress for dear life because it is about to slip to the floor with customers around, the alterations woman had the audacity to proclaim, “Your body is so big!  What happened?”  I stared at myself in the mirror, wanting to be better than the situation and not let it affect me.  
But I’m human.  I’m so very human and can’t be dissected any more.  After months of struggling with body comments in the Philippines (Americans are GIANTS in many parts of the world), my wall of reason and retort collapsed.
I cried over the steering wheel in my car.
When I went back for the dress the alterations women informed me, “This is a big job, we have to really size down this dress.  It’ll probably be another $100.”
I cried inside.  My unemployed ass is feeling it.
There you have it.  I, training for my first road race, running to be a healthier womyn; lost 25lbs and am dropping weight not for weight but for health, to kick diabetes in the ass and tenderly care for my heart and rallying for a healthy pregnancy someday – am charged more for my larger boobs and then pay more to have it taken it all the while am told am TOO BIG.
The bridal industry makes billions for making everyday womyn feel less and too much and charges them to make them fit a “dress” or have the “dress” fit you.  But it’s much more than a dress.  It’s a costly uniformity to match other womyn who feel less then who they are because of a damn wring of cloth.  The vultures in this industry don’t care what it costs you or what it does to your insides.  They care that you pay and will do all things possible to push you against a wall with an arbitrary chart nailed to said wall so they can measure you, coerce you, tsk tsk at your body.
It’s more than bullshit.  It’s dead wrong.
Fuck the bridal industry.
UPDATE
9/16/2008
I picked the dreaded but gorgeous dress up today and tried it on for my final fitting.  It [now] fits perfectly and I love how I look on the outside.  Inside, I feel like shit and my wallet is empty.  How else can I say this: IT’S NOT WORTH IT.
The owner of the shop gave it to me and while I was gathering the nerve to say something of how a rude tailor has driven away my business, more customers came in the door.  I stood there, paralyzed, wanting to say something but unsure of how to say it.  
My sweaty grip on the plastic covered the dress was fading I tried to focus on my words and say what I so desperately wanted to communicate: YOU DON’T MAKE COMMENTS ABOUT PEOPLE’S BODIES WHEN YOU DON’T KNOW THEIR MEDICAL HISTORY.  If you know nothing about what someone has been through, what scars mean, how size, how little, how disappeared, how big, how crooked, how asymetrical things are – YOU SAY NOTHING or ask if you are genuinely curious about someone’s story.  Ask out of kindness, never assumption.
My body is and has a been a battleground of health both physical and mental.  It’s been a lovely developing playground and heaven for me.  As I age, I’ve learned how to honor it, keep it, and worship it with healthy living and sleep.
Bodies are sacred – how hard of a concept is that to grasp?
I ended up grabbing the business card and flashed her a look that said, “Oh don’t worry, you’ll be hearing from me.”